How Radicals Have Hijacked the Peace Movement
For a while, self proclaimed "moderates" in the emerging peace movement
argued that there had to be a serious, mainstream and effective anti-war movement.
Like the radicals, the moderates argued against going to war against Iraq. What
disturbed them was not the end goal---but the sponsorship and tone of the growing
mass antiwar movement, which once again, scheduled a massive March on Washington.
David Corn of the Nation magazine complained that the peace movement
would never reach the churches and union halls if it was led by those who praised
Fidel Castro, convicted cop-killer Mumia Abu Jamal, North Korean dictator Kim
Jong Il, and which threw in defense of Serb war criminal Slobodan Milosevic
for good measure. Todd Gitlin, the distinguished Columbia University professor
of sociology and communications, echoed Corn's concern in the pages of Mother
Jones, writing that the current movement was too "provincial to stop
the coming war." Its problem was simple. It was "turning the movement
toward the bitter-end orthodoxy of the Old Left." And writing in the Chronicle
of Higher Education, Prof. Michael Berube opined that America needs a "Mature,
Legitimate and Popular" antiwar movement. The problem he was dealing with:
The "demonstrations to date have been led by unreconstructed Communist-front
groups."
These writers and others made these warnings as strong as they could. Time has
passed now, and it seems their pleas were made in vain. This past weekend, as
last year, the growing antiwar movement was still being led by the same anti-American
and extreme pro-Communist group lets as before. Thousands assembled in our nation's
capital and in San Francisco, parading out the same old left-wing speakers to
vent their outrage on America's supposed aggression.
And once again, the sponsor of the march was Act Now to Stop War and End Racism
(ANSWER) a group run out of Ramsey Clark's International Action Center, a front
group of the Communist Workers World Party. And once again, despite their protestations,
the so-called moderates enlisted en masse, lending their names and their numbers
to the extremist's scheduled action. Their lame argument was a simple one: they
know how to organize. Nobody listens to speeches or looks at placards; all that
is counted are bodies opposed to the war on Iraq.
Today, the ANSWER coalition claims that the threat that menaces the world today
is not the "purported" one from Iraq, but the "actual" threat
of the use of "Weapons of Mass Destruction" by George W. Bush, who
is planning "preemptive wars of aggression."
To these Communist march organizers, the purpose of U.S. policy is not to neutralize
the ever growing threat from a nuclear Iraq, but to "spend $200 billion
so that
Big Oil and banking corporations can take control of and
profit from the oil of the Persian/Arabian Gulf."
And just as they argued before the liberation of Afghanistan that any war there
would be unwelcome and would lead to hundreds of thousands of innocent lives
lost, they argue now that a new Gulf war "will be a catastrophe,"
as the U.S.--not Saddam Hussein with his SCUD missiles and chemical and biological
arsenal-- threaten our soldiers "and civilians to vast toxic exposure"
through the use of "depleted uranium weapons."
And so their repetitious and now so well known slogan: "No Blood for Oil."
In their world, the U.S. is oppressing peoples everywhere---supporting Israel's
"murderous war of occupation," engaging in "a policy of U.S.-supported
terrorism," and leading the world in a dangerous direction. Their perspective
is the warped world view of a discredited Communist system and its spent leadership;
no wonder they herald the brutal regime of Kim in North Korea and think that
Saddam Hussein is a benign and well-meaning leader. At the March, its extremist
Communist leaders presented the songs of Patti Smith and the words of actress
Jessica Lange, a woman who already distinguished herself in London a week ago
by stating that: "I hate Bush. I despise him and his entire administration
It
makes me feel ashamed to come from the United States
it is humiliating."
To attack Iraq, she added, would be "unconstitutional, immoral and illegal."
She is a woman, it appears, who fit right in with the Maoist ideology of the
March's sponsors. As for Patti Smith, she explained that "I don't care
who it is [who organizes the protest] as long as they feel the same."
Hearing these people and their slogans and looking at their signs brings to
mind the admonition by John Lennon in the 1960's, when he was asked to write
a song for the Movement. His response, "But if you go carrying pictures
of Chairman Mao, You' ain't gonna make it with anyone anyhow," is needed
more than ever.
That Mao is now replaced by the likes of Kim Jong-Il and Yassir Arafat makes
little difference. Or perhaps they should sing the refrain of another one of
those antiwar anthems from the days gone by, but address it to themselves and
the March leaders: "When Will They Ever Learn, When Will They Ever Learn?"
This article was originally published by the New York Post and is reprinted with permission of the author.